Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Correct myths about the flu vaccine: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Dec, 2014 11:52 AM
  • Correct myths about the flu vaccine: Study
As health systems across the world are trying to increase vaccination levels, a study has suggested that it is critical to understand how to address vaccine hesitancy and counter myths about vaccine safety.
 
Researchers from New Hampshire-based Dartmouth College and the University of Exeter in Britain found that debunking the myth that the seasonal influenza vaccine can give you the flu actually reduced intent to vaccinate among people who are most concerned about vaccine's side effects.
 
"Correcting myths about vaccines, however, may not be the most effective approach to promoting immunisation among vaccine skeptics, said Brendan Nyhan, an assistant professor at Dartmouth College.
 
The study showed that more than four in 10 Americans endorsed the myth that the flu vaccine can give you the flu, saying it is either "somewhat" or "very accurate".
 
Respondents, who received corrective information that the flu vaccine cannot give you the flu, were less likely to report believing in this misperception or to say that the flu vaccine is unsafe.
 
"However, providing this corrective information also reduced the self-reported likelihood of getting a flu vaccine among respondents with high levels of concern about vaccine's side effects, added Jason Reifler, a senior lecturer of politics at University of Exeter.
 
The study was conducted with a nationally representative sample of adults in the US, collected as part of the 2012 Cooperative Congressional Election Survey.
 
"We need to learn how to most effectively promote immunisation. Directly correcting vaccine myths may not be the most effective approach," the authors concluded.
 
The article appeared in the journal Vaccine.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Special team in PMO will fast-track Japanese investment: Modi

Special team in PMO will fast-track Japanese investment: Modi
Assuring the same quick reaction and proactive response a Japanese investor accorded when he was chief minister of Gujarat, Prime Minister Narendra...

Special team in PMO will fast-track Japanese investment: Modi

Women at greater stroke risk from resistant hyper-tension

Women at greater stroke risk from resistant hyper-tension
The condition known as Resistant Hyper-tension increases stroke risk by 35 percent in women and 20 percent in elderly patients, according to new research....

Women at greater stroke risk from resistant hyper-tension

Caffeinated 'energy' drinks bad for heart

"Energy" drinks which are so popular during physical exercise and even otherwise among children and younger adults can cause heart problems, a research shows....

Caffeinated 'energy' drinks bad for heart

Wine good for your heart only if you exercise

Wine good for your heart only if you exercise
If you think moderate wine drinking can protect against cardio-vascular diseases (CVDs), you are probably right: Just mix daily exercise to it....

Wine good for your heart only if you exercise

World's first battery-less pacemaker in the works

World's first battery-less pacemaker in the works
In a revolutionary breakthrough for heart patients, scientists have come up with a way to power a cardiac pacemaker with an alternative energy source - the heart motion....

World's first battery-less pacemaker in the works

New blood test to reliably detect TB in kids

New blood test to reliably detect TB in kids
About one million children per year develop tuberculosis (TB) worldwide, but unfortunately detecting TB in children has been a challenge as the...

New blood test to reliably detect TB in kids